Famous People in the World of Sound Sound and Communication Project Rang 4/5/6 Knockconan NS 2012 Part of our work for the RDS Primary Science Fair 2012.

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Famous People in the World of Sound Sound and Communication Project Rang 4/5/6 Knockconan NS 2012 Part of our work for the RDS Primary Science Fair 2012

Chuck Yeager Chuck Yeager was born in When he finished school, he joined the U.S. Army Air Corps and he fought in World War II. His plane was shot down over enemy lines in 1943,but with the help of the French he made it to Spain, which was neutral. After the war he stayed in the Air Force teaching others to fly. In 1947 he was asked to test a rocket-powered X-I fighter plane. Yeager broke the sound barrier on Oct. 14th 1947.

Thomas Edison ( ) Thomas Edison was born in Ohio, USA. His mother took him out of school because he asked too many questions! Soon Edison had a job as a telegraph operator on a Canadian railway. He invented a better way to do it. Through selling his new telegraphic appliances Edison earned $40,000. Then he established his own laboratory in In 1868 he invented the new telegraph system, in 1874 the typewriter, in 1877 the phonograph and in 1879 the electric light bulb. In 1882 he developed and installled the world’s first large central electric-power station in New York. Edison died in 1931.

Alexander Graham Bell Alexander Graham Bell was born in 1847 in Edinburgh, Scotland. He is best known for his invention of the telephone. Many people tried to invent a way of sending human speech by wire, but Alexander Graham Bell was the first to succeed. He was very clever – he knew lots about electricity, but he also new lots about acoustics which is the study of sound. The first telephone was made of a wooden stand, a funnel, a cup of acid and some copper wire. Bell invented the telephone with the help of his assistant Thomas Watson. The first telephone conversation took place on March 10th 1876 in Boston Massachusetts. The first telephone call that took place on this day was very simple. Bell was in one room and Watson was in another and Bell said to Watson “Mr. Watson, come here, I want you!” The word ‘telephone’ comes from the Greek words ‘tele’ which means from afar and ‘phone’ which means voice.

Guglielmo Marconi Guglielmo Marconi was a brilliant scientist. The most important of his breakthroughs was the discovery of radio waves in He received a Nobel Prize for Physics in He had the advantage of a wealthy background. After his first overseas radio transmission between Britain and France in 1899, he was brought to the attention of the public Government, military and postal departments quickly became interested in the potential uses of the new technology and within a few more years, enthusiasm was widespread. But the event which made Marconi world famous, and the one which silenced many of the doubters about the practical and scientific uses of his equipment, was the two thousand mile transmission of Morse code across the Atlantic in Many had thought this an impossible task.

John Logie Baird John Logie Baird created the first television using a lens set in revolving disc to scan a picture. It was later developed by Americans Vladimir Zworykin and Philo Farnsworth..

Arthur C Clarke Microwave radio signals must travel in straight lines. At first they had to be sent from relay station to relay station. Then in 1945 a science fiction writer called Arthur C. Clarke came up with a solution to the problem. He suggested putting the relay equipment on satellites staying fixed in one point in the sky at 36,000km above the ground. In 1964, his dream came true as the first geostationary satellite, Syncom 3, was launched successfully into orbit. Nowadays signals can go from one place to anywhere else in the world almost instantly.

Samuel Morse In 1837, Samuel Morse invented Morse Code. This a communication system made up of dots and dashes. A dot was a short tap and a dash was a long dash. Operators would tap out a message using this communication. We have a print out of the alphabet written out in Morse Code on our display

John Shore’s Tuning Fork John Shore invented the tuning fork. It is made of steel. He invented the tuning fork in He called it a “pitch” fork for fun. He played the trumpet. A tuning fork makes an extremely pure sound. The two prongs vibrate, move in and out, creating sound that makes a curving wave form.